Australia's Reconciliation Minister is at the centre of a growing storm over comments made to foreign newspapers about the country's Aboriginal population.

Surely we should put this sort of nonsense behind us

John Howard, Australian PM

The minister, Philip Ruddock, is under fire for telling French newspaper Le Monde that Aborigines were disadvantaged because they had come into contact with "developed civilisations" later than other indigenous peoples.

Unlike native American Indians, he is quoted as saying, Aborigines were hunter-gatherers who had not mastered "the techniques of agriculture" or developed the wheel.

Activists have criticised Mr Ruddock saying his comments demonstrate a fundamental lack of respect for and understanding of Aboriginal culture.

Philip Ruddock: Need to focus on tackling disadvantage

They have accused him of undermining recent signs of progress in relations between black and white Australians built up by the Sydney Olympics.

On Wednesday it was revealed that as well as talking to Le Monde, Mr Ruddock had made similar comments to the Washington Post earlier in the year in which he said the government was starting "from a very low base" in improving conditions for Aborigines.

He has said his comments have been taken out of context and were in no way meant to be disparaging.

'Mistaken analysis'

Today's disadvantage essentially stems from the whole history of dispossession and mistreatment

Evelyn Scott, Council of Aboriginal Reconciliation

"In no way then or now did I intend to reflect adversely on indigenous culture," he told the Melbourne-based newspaper, The Age.

"My comments need to be seen in the context of a wide-ranging discussion on the reasons for Aboriginal disadvantage," he said, adding it was more important to focus attention on tackling that disadvantage.

However, the Chairwoman of the Council of Aboriginal Reconciliation, Evelyn Scott, says that whatever context Mr Ruddock had taken his analysis of Aboriginal problems had missed the point.